TRANSCRIPT

I was born in San Diego, so I’m a California girl. I lived there my whole life except for two years when we were in seminary in Fort Worth. I think being on the West Coast has definitely shaped me to experience life from a perspective of . . . I don’t know. We originate ideas. At least we’d like to think we originate ideas on the West Coast, and it seems like we’re always a little bit ahead of the curve.

My parents had a tremendous influence on me. My dad was a pastor in small churches. My mom was the quintessential pastor’s wife. And I think I learned about service from them. They . . . They not only taught me to love God, but they really showed me how to live a life of service.

And when I was a little girl, there really weren’t that many women that I knew of who worked outside the home, as they would say. My mom didn’t ever work outside the home once she had kids. Most of the women in the churches that I grew up in . . . So I really didn’t ever have a career goal for myself. I always wanted to be a wife and a mom. I studied to be a home ec teacher. I got my degree in home economics because at one point Rick and I thought we were gonna be missionaries somewhere around the world. And I thought, “What a great, great thing.” You know home economics. That was as very practical major. As it turns out we ended up in, you know, affluent Orange County California where nobody cares at all whether I can cook, or sew, or find the best price of chicken. I mean who cares? It seems irrelevant. But at the time it seemed like something good to do.

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